I 1 BKI1 





l I \ll.\t (NUCLEUS 



Febrifuge 



i 



Febrile !:l "> 



I lu' qu 



F. bullosa 



uarrhah 



F. fame- 

 l- Bava 

 F ' • 



re. 1 '• re " 



mittens 



,; Pertaining to or 



■ 



I 



I 



Fecc- |uor, 



tions "i 



I 

 Fecula |. The 



Liment subsiding 



Feculent i .impure]. Abound- 



mentitious ; 

 y. 

 Fecundate fei undate]. 



:llt. 



Fecundation 



ion ; the a< 

 F., Artificial, impregnation by 



:iic tluid 



Fecundity ... fruitfulness]. 



iction. F., Segregate. See 



nt. 

 Fee': |. Lacking strength ; 



P -minded, idiotic. 

 Fee! nourish], i. To supply 



i.illy 

 fodder. 

 Feeder irish]. I. An 



of insane 

 2. See Cross- 



nourish]. The 



V.. Artificial, the intro- 



i de- 



ump or in the form of an 



en : a , f ■ i I . l by fo id oilier 



F-bottle, a glass flask 

 eding liquid 

 F -e .; . I in tb feed 



F Forcible, the admi n of 



■ 

 F, -gland, a land 



F. -groove, 

 r bee, al< 



the 

 1 by the Rectum, the introduction of 



nema or sup 

 .ystcm. 



ition 



-. 



Feel- In nna. 



ious 

 sta 



Feet I he plural of Foot, q. v. F., Frosted. See 



tin. 



FegaritK [Sp-i ""'?» inflammation]. An 



old name for a form of gangrenous stomatitis. 



Fehling'a Method. A method of dressing the umbili- 

 cal cord. I 'he stump is wrapped in cotton- wool pow 

 dered with a mixture ol salicylic acid one pan, and 

 rch five pan-. It becomes mummified. F.'s 

 Solution, a solution for testing for sugar in the urine ; 

 tin- solution doe- not keep well, Prof. Hoi 

 land advises its manufacture as follows: To be kept 

 in two distinct parts [a) lake copper sulph, 34.04 

 gms. and watei enough to make 500 c.c. M. 

 Pure Rochelle salt 173 gms.; sol. sodium hydrate (sp 

 ,1.33), 100 c.c, and water enough to make 500 

 I or use, mix equal volumes, and thus make 

 Fehling's solution. See Copper. F.'s Test for Sugar. 

 See / v... Table of. 



Feigned Disease. Sec Disease. 



Fel [ 1 I Bile. F. bovis, or F. bovinum, ox-gall. The 

 biliary liquid of the domestic ox, Bos taurus. It is a 

 dark-green, ropy substance, consisting mainly of sodium 

 glycocholate and sodium taurocholate, together with 

 cholesterin. It is a tonic, antiseptic, and purgative, 

 useful in emulsifying the fatty portions of food. F. b. 

 inspissatum, 100 parts fresh ox-gall, strained and 

 evaporated to 15 parts. Dose gr. v-xv. F. b. purifi- 

 catum, ox-gall 3, alcohol 1 part. This .should stand 

 24 houi -training ; then evaporate to the con- 



sistence of a pilular mass. ■ Dose gr. v-xv. 



Fell's Method. A method of forced respiration in cases 

 of narcotic poisoning or drowning, by means of an 

 apparatus consisting of a tracheotomy-tube attached to 

 a bellows. F.'s Paste, Caustic, or Cancer-salve, a 

 famous salve formerly used in epithelioma. Its formula 

 was : chlorid of zinc and powdered sanguinaria root, 

 of each one ounce; starch, enough to make a paste; 

 apply on pieces of kid leather or wash leather. 



Fellator [feV -at-or). See Passivism. 



Fellatrice ( fel-at-ris f \ [Fr.l. The female agent in irru- 

 mation, who receives the male organ in her mouth and 

 by friction with the lips or tongue produces the orgasm. 



Fel'lic Acid [fel'-ik) [fel, bile], C^H^O,. A constit- 

 uent of the bile. 



Fellmongers' Disease. Anthrax; so called as attacking 

 dealers in fells, or pelts, and skins. 



Fellows' Syrup of Hypophosphites. A proprietary 

 preparation. Each dram contains hypophosph. of iron 

 gr. j, quinin gr. ' 4 , strychnin gr. Jj, calcium and 

 manganese aa ^r. j, potassium q. s. hose zj. Unof. 



Felo-de-se [fe f -lo-de-se) [Sp.]. A suicide. Also, anyone 

 who commit- an unlawful malicious act, the conse- 

 quence of which is his own death. 



Felon [fel'-ori). See Paronychia. 



Felt \_feltrum, felt]. A fabric of hair or wool entangled 

 together by beating and rolling. Felt splints are em- 

 ployed in surgery. 



Female (fr'-mal) \_feminea, femella; femina, woman]. 

 Belonging to the sex that conceives and bears young. 

 In surgery, denoting that part of a double-limbed instru- 

 ment tb e complementary part. F. Cathe- 

 ter, a catheter basing a short tube with a slight curve 

 to correspond to the female urethra. 



Feminism (f,»i' in-izm) [femina, a woman]. Arrested 

 development of the male organ- <>f generation, accom- 

 panied by various mental and physical approximations 

 to the characters of the female sex. 



Feminity ( f,-ni -in'-it-e), or Femininity ( fem-in-in' '■ 

 1 \ femina, a woman]. The sum of those qualities 

 that distinguish the female sex. 



Feminonucleus 1 fern in-o nu f -kk^ni)\femina 1 y fiovaasi\ 



nucleus, & kernel], The embryonii female nucleus, 



distinguished from the corresponding male nucleus. 



